Dragonfly : NASA and the crisis aboard the MIR /

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Burrough, Bryan, 1961-
Edition:1st ed.
Imprint:New York, NY : HarperCollinsPublishers, c1998.
Description:528 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 25 cm.
Language:English
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/3612062
Hidden Bibliographic Details
ISBN:0887307833
Notes:Includes index.
Description
Summary:On February 12, 1997, two Russian cosmonauts joined an American astronaut on board the only permanent manned outpost in space, the dilapidated, eleven-year-old Mir space station. It was to be a routine mission, the fourth of seven trips to Mir that NASA astronauts would take as "dress rehearsals" for the two countries' partnership in a new International Space Station they were building back on Earth. But there had been bad omens: a Moscow psychic who predicted a mysterious disaster; a Russian doctor who warned that the crew was psychologically incompatible. Within two weeks the omens were borne out, as the three men were suddenly forced to fight the worst fire in space history. <p>This was only the beginning of what would become the most dangerous mission in the thirty-six-year history of manned space travel-- an epic, six-month misadventure that would climax in the most harrowing accident man has faced in space since Apollo 13. In "Dragonfly", bestselling author Bryan Burrough tells for the first time the incredible true story of how a joint Russian-American crew narrowly survived almost every trauma an astronaut could imagine: fire, power blackouts, chemical leaks, docking failures, nail-biting spacewalks, and constant mechanical breakdowns, all climaxing in a dramatic midspace collision that left everyone on board scrambling for their lives. <p>Based on hundreds of hours of interviews with the cosmonauts, astronauts, Russian and American ground controllers, psychologists, and scientists involved, Dragonfly is the saga of a mission as fraught with political and bureaucratic intrigues as any Washington potboiler. Using never-before-released internal NASA memoranda, flight logs, anddebriefings, Burrough vividly portrays an American space program in which many astronauts refuse to raise safety concerns for fear they will be frozen out of future missions. It offers an unprecedented look inside the rattletra
Item Description:Includes index.
Physical Description:528 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 25 cm.
ISBN:0887307833